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Alibaba and AUS Merchant Services Pay $600M to DOJ Over Illegal Drug Sales

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Why it matters

Alibaba Group and its U.S. payment processor, AUS Merchant Services, have agreed to pay $600 million to resolve Department of Justice allegations that they failed to prevent merchants from selling and importing illegal pharmaceuticals, controlled substances, regulated chemicals, and pill presses into the United States. Alibaba.com's operator admitted in a non-prosecution agreement to failing to prevent approximately 80,000 product sales involving unauthorized imports valued at over $200 million between January 2016 and December 2024. Under the settlement, Alibaba will pay a $125 million criminal penalty and forfeit $200 million, while AUS will pay an $85 million penalty and forfeit $190 million.

The violations persisted for nearly nine years despite internal concerns about inadequate filtering systems. Law enforcement conducted over 40 undercover purchases of illegal pharmaceuticals and counterfeiting equipment to build the case. Alibaba also provided a private in-platform messaging service that merchants exploited to circumvent platform controls and facilitate unlawful transactions. Both companies have accepted responsibility and committed to enhancing their compliance programs.

For practitioners, this settlement signals heightened federal scrutiny of marketplace operators and payment processors for third-party seller conduct. The case establishes that companies cannot rely on passive compliance frameworks when employees have flagged systemic failures. Expect similar enforcement actions against other platforms with inadequate controls over cross-border pharmaceutical sales and against financial service providers that process payments for illegal goods. Organizations facilitating international e-commerce should audit their merchant vetting, content filtering, and internal messaging systems now.

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